Water pollution has emerged as one of the gravest environmental threats in India. Its biggest sources are city sewage and industrial waste that are discharged untreated into the rivers. Despite the best efforts of the government, only about 10 per cent of the waste water that is generated in the cities is treated and the rest is discharged into the rivers.
The entry of toxic substances into water bodies like lakes, streams and rivers leads to deterioration in the quality of water and severely affects the aquatic ecosystems. Due to this, even the ground water gets contaminated. All these have a devastating effect on all living creatures that exist near the polluted water bodies. Urgent steps are needed to be taken by the Indian government on the water pollution management front and the flawed policies need to be amended in order to obtain concrete results.
Water pollution is a reality of human existence. Activities like agriculture and industrial production generate water pollution apart from the biological waste. In India, every year, approximately 50,000 million litres of wastewater, both industrial and domestic, is generated in urban areas. If the data of rural areas is also taken into account, the overall figure will be much higher. The materials that constitute industrial waste include highly harmful substances like salts, chemicals, grease, oils, paints, iron, cadmium, lead, arsenic, zinc, tin, etc. In some cases even radio-active materials are discharged into the rivers bodies by some companies, who for the sake of saving money on water treatment, throw all the norms to the winds.
All efforts by the government to put a check on wastewater management have failed as the treatment systems require high capital investment for installation and also high cost is incurred on operational maintenance. This is a sore point not only for the farmers but also for the factory owners as the high cost of treating industrial wastewater affects their bottom-line. The cost of establishing and running a wastewater treatment plant in a factory can be as high as 20 percent of the total expenditure. Hence we see a situation where, despite the presence of government norms, effluents continue to flow into the river bodies untreated.
On the other hand, the government of India is spending millions of rupees every year on water pollution control. According to rough estimates, Indian government has spent nearly 20,000 crore rupees till now on various schemes in India, like the Ganga Action Plan and Yamuna Action Plan, to control water pollution in rivers. But no positive results have been achieved as yet. The government should realise that all efforts to get the river-bodies free from water pollution will fail unless the process of untreated industrial and other wastewater getting into the water bodies is not stopped.
Hence the government should, instead of spending money on pollution control schemes, divert its resources to encourage wastewater treatment in agriculture and industrial sector. The money spent on pollution control should be spent on giving subsidies to the industries which generate wastewater and on strict monitoring of their adherence to the norms. Research should be promoted in areas like Nanotechnology to find out ways and means to build cheaper wastewater management plants. Here also, the approach should be to re-use the treated water for agriculture instead of letting it go into the rivers and streams.
It should not be forgotten that only 0.3 per cent of total water available on this planet is fit for consumption for human beings, animals & plants. The remaining 99.7 per cent is present either as sea water or as glaciers on the mountains. Hence ignoring the issue of water pollution any longer would mean inviting a Third World War which would be fought for the control of water resources.
River pollution is a result of a complex combination of processes that reduce overall river water quality.
* Acid rain,
* Industrial pollution
* Agricultural pollution contribute to river pollution
* Everyday activities that drain untreated pollutants and leachate into rivers and streams
* Transport: - where carbon and one-drop-at-a-time 'oil spills' can also cause pollution through storm run-off
=== === A holistic and integrative understanding of the cause-effect cycles of river pollution is an effective starting point to improve river water quality.Water pollution is a complex issue - from the source of polution to its impacts, both short-term and long-term on human and other species that depend on water. Point and non-point sources of pollution have a profound impact on the degree of pollution, and many times the actual causes are hidden behind more 'visible' causes. Understanding these causes-behind-causes is critical in developing appropriate responses to reduce pollution. Broad-based awareness of the sources and impacts of pollution - involving a number of stakeholders on the water continuum - is also important to effect lasting solutions. You can start by using green cleaners and fertilizers.
Chemicals in water can be treated and turned into non-poisonous substances. Laws can be made to prevent companies from dumping waste into oceans, seas, and rivers.
One step taken by the government to reduce water pollution is participating and setting up awareness raising activities. The government also investigates ground water quality regularly.
the measures being taken are the Indian government has banned people who throw garbage or wash clothes or bathe in the rivers
The government does not allow factories to be near the lakes, ponds and the other water bodies
To create better or safer pesticides and herbicides.
Pakistan government has taken defference steps to reduce the polllution level. Inorder to decrease the air pollution government organize tree plantation compaign twice a year.
no step is taken by the government till now because government is corrupted
There are various steps taken by government. Various schemes are formed.
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what steps can be taken to reduce and resolve colflicts that are behavioral in nature
The government of India has taken many steps to help prevent pollution in the country. They are phasing out old vehicles, they have mass transit, and all newer vehicles have Catalytic Converters.
The government enforces laws that are meant to protect the environment as a whole. The government also encourages efforts aimed at keeping the ocean free of pollution.
Pakistan has done ALOT to stop polluting :) the government has become stricter in people throwing trash around people dont burn trash anymore and there are MANY other things :) xx
India's Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas is taking many steps to reduce pollution around the Taj Majal. These steps included making lead-free petrol more available, discontinuing the use of high-lead petrol and connecting more homes to the liquid petroleum gas grid to reduce the use of dirtier fuels like coal.
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